I have a question for you. If you are on a burning plane and
realize that you have only minutes left to live. Would you still be an
atheist?

Coming from a religious background I never paid much attention
to religion, in fact I still don't.

Someone once challenged me with the following: "Even if
you don't believe, ask God to make of you what he thinks is best. Maintain
this attitude of expectance and give yourself 6 months."

My reaction was this: If God is real, then he will know what
is best for me. In that case I am willing to go along with what he says.
If he is not real then it will be an interesting exercise for 6 months.
I had nothing to loose. So I did it.

Looking at my own life; Jesus Christ has made a massive impact
and it was of no man's influence but the challenge from a friend.

Try it for yourself and let me know.

Jack PS. I have been on a burning plane once. I does change your
life.

Someone once challenged me with the following: "Even if
you don't believe, ask God to make of you what he thinks is best. Maintain
this attitude of expectance and give yourself 6 months."

So, then, should I also go sit on Santa's lap this winter? considering
that I don't believe in Santa?

I don't understand your logic here.

I can see how, by believing anyway, against my better judgement, I could
psych myself into the delusion that there is such a thing as a god. I can
see this happening much sooner than six months.

If God is real, then he will know what is best for me. In that
case I am willing to go along with what he says. If he is not real then
it will be an interesting exercise for 6 months. I had nothing to loose.
So I did it.

If there is no god, then the best I can do is to learn how to develop
my own understanding of reality. If there is no supernatural, then I do
best to fulfill my needs and desires through natural means such as working
for them.

I tried Christianity for three years, and it took me over five years
to "deprogram" myself and return to my former self. Experimenting
with religion in the manner you suggest is not necessarily the benign,
"interesting" exercise that you represent it to be.

I do have a question for you. If you are on a burning plane and
realize that you have only minutes left to live. Would you still be an
atheist?

In such a situation, I probably wouldn't be myself, seeing that my bloodstream
would be raging with adrenaline and other psychoactive chemicals, and the
possibility would exist that I would go into shock and pass out.

Then again, the last time I prayed, was while I was having a tonic-clonic
seizure after an accident, and the result of that prayer was my realization
that, even in death, I am on my own. At that moment, I was able to understand
that since my autonomic breathing mechanism was not bringing oxygen into
my lungs, I needed to put every bit of what little energy and consciousness
I had at the moment into forcing my diaphram to take air into my lungs.
I credit this realization for my having survived this accident, and for
my return to the atheism of my youth.

Since the scrolls which teach about Hell (Bible, Koran, etc.) are patently
erroneous on matters which can be verified, I have no reason to think these
scrolls are correct on untestable matters such as Hell, salvation, gods,
etc.

Since I do not think there's a god -- since I think the notion of a
god's existence is erroneous -- I have no reflex toward asking any god
for help. I doubt I would act reflexively even when death comes. I am not
gay, and thus would probably not engage in homosexual sex if I knew the
end was inevitably near, so I don't think I would do anything else which
is against my nature -- such a pray.

Many other atheists throughout history have faced death without lapsing
into the error of theistic groveling; therefore, I doubt I would do much
differently than these others have done.

For a theist to assume that everyone in a falling aircraft prays to
a god is erroneous, and to say as much is slanderous. This simply is not
the case, as has been proven when a falling aircraft has regained control.
A situation that comes to mind is artist-musician Laurie Anderson, who
does a Performance Art piece about her experience in a falling aircraft
which subsequently regained control.

Looking at my own life; Jesus Christ has made a massive impact
and it was of no man's influence but the challenge from a friend.

I agree that faith in Jesus Christ can make a massive impact on a
person. What concerns me is the following:

1. Causality: Faith in something, followed by a massive change, does
not indicate that the object of faith (Jesus, a god, etc.) exists or caused
the change.

2. Pragmatism: A massive change, albeit impressive and possibly comforting,
is not necessarily good or healthy for the individual.

3. Testimonials: Just because an individual claims to have had a cause-and-effect
experience, does not mean that that experience happened or that the experience
was healthy or that the cause-and-effect chain took place in the manner
observed by the individual.

As a Christian, I think you will agree with me that a religious experience
in, say, Islam or Hinduism is not necessarily true or healthy -- despite
the insistence by the Muslim or Hindu that the experience is true and healthy.

In other words, you are atheistic toward Allah and Brahma and so am
I. Can you see why I am also atheistic toward Jehovah and Jesus?